Friday, April 3, 2026

‘Let the benign Genius of the Mystic Art preside’

    
Monitor of the Work, Lectures and Ceremonies of Ancient Craft Masonry in the Jurisdiction of the Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons of the State of New York is available from Lodge Services or your lodge secretary. (Okay, maybe a graphic designer might have helped a little with the cover but, hey, it’s done.)

Many years in the making, Grand Lodge’s Monitor is published and is available from Lodge Services. Its proper title, Monitor of the Work, Lectures and Ceremonies of Ancient Craft Masonry in the Jurisdiction of the Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons of the State of New York, the book is copyrighted 2025, but I learned of its existence—again, after anticipation of years—just a week ago through a comment on Faceypage. Got my copy yesterday.

Immediately, I searched for content unknown to me, and no sooner than on Page 7 are Opening Charges.

Opening Charges?

Opening Charges!

You probably know a Closing Charge, delivered at, yes, the close of the lodge communication. I doubt it is ubiquitous throughout the country, but it is found near and far. In New York, we call it the Harris Charge (“…you are now about to quit this sacred retreat of friendship and virtue…”). It is an optional coda to the meeting, although I don’t know why a Master would opt out of it. When it was my privilege to serve in the East twenty-one years ago in New Jersey, that was possibly my favorite piece of Work. It differs slightly from New York’s version.

Who’s Harris?

Bro. Thaddeus Harris
The Rev. Thaddeus Mason Harris, D.D. (1768-1842) was a Massachusetts Freemason. More than that, he was that Grand Lodge’s first Grand Chaplain. (Synchronously enough, he laid down his working tools on this very date, April 3.) He also served as Corresponding Grand Secretary and, in 1812, was appointed Deputy Grand Master! A remarkable seminal figure in Massachusetts Freemasonry, but he is a topic for another edition of The Magpie Mason. (This portrait of Harris hangs on the ground floor of the Boston Masonic Building, home of the Grand Lodge of Masons in Massachusetts.)

Where was I going with this? Yes! These Opening Charges.

They are not new to Freemasonry, but they’re news to me and they are terrific brief orations you’ll be proud to hear at the start of your lodge meetings. There are two, prefaced with this:


Performance of an Opening Charge is optional. One charge or the other, without alteration or combination, may be given in full immediately following the prayer in the Ritual of Opening, or at the commencement of any untiled Masonic event. Only The Monitor or The Chaplain’s Book are to be used if the charge is read in a tiled lodge.


The first Charge:


The ways of science are beautiful. Knowledge is attained by degrees. Wisdom dwells with contemplation. There are we to seek her. Though the passage be difficult, the farther we proceed, the easier it will become. If we are united, our society must flourish. Let all things give place to peace and good fellowship. Uniting in the grand design, let us be happy in ourselves, and endeavor to contribute to the happiness of others. Let us promote the useful arts; and by them mark our superiority and distinction. Let us cultivate the moral virtues; and improve in all that is good and amiable. Let the genius of Masonry preside over our conduct; and under its sovereign sway let us act with becoming dignity. Let our recreations be innocent, and pursued with moderation. Never let us expose our character to derision. Thus shall we act in conformity to our precepts, and support the name we have always borne, of being a respectable, a regular, and a uniform society.


The second Charge:


The ways of Virtue are beautiful. Knowledge is attained by degrees. Wisdom dwells in contemplation: there we must seek her. Let us then, Brethren, apply ourselves with becoming zeal to the practice of the excellent principles inculcated by our Order. Let us ever remember that the great objects of our association are the restraint of improper desires and passions, the cultivation of an active benevolence, and the promotion of a correct knowledge of the duties we owe to God, to our neighbor, and to ourselves. Let us be united and practice with assiduity the sacred tenets of our order. Let all private animosities, of any unhappily exist, give place to affection and brotherly love. It is useless parade to talk of the subjection of irregular passions within the walls of the Lodge, if we permit them to triumph in our daily intercourse with each other. Uniting in the grand design, let us be happy ourselves, and endeavor to promote the happiness of others. Let us cultivate the great moral virtues which are laid down on our Masonic Trestleboard, and improve in everything that is good, amiable and useful. Let the benign Genius of the Mystic Art preside over our councils, and under her sway let us act with a dignity becoming the high moral character of our venerable institution.


So, if these stirring words did not flow from RW Harris’ heart and mind, whence came they? I thought some of the phrases sounded familiar, but wasn’t sure if my memory was tricking me, so I asked Sam.

RW Samuel Kinsey, of Mariners 67, is Chairman of the Custodians of the Work, the team that preserves Grand Lodge’s Standard Work and Lectures and that publishes these books we need to learn our rituals and orations. He provided me a snippet of the Custodians’ report to Grand Lodge, which will meet next month:


The antecedents of the Opening Charges may be found in A Vindication of Masonry and its Excellency demonstrated in a Discourse at the Consecration of the Lodge of Vernon Kilwinning, on May 15, 1741 by Charles Leslie. This lengthy discourse was later incorporated into the first edition of William Preston’s Illustrations of Masonry, with increasingly revised and reorganized forms of the Vindication continuing to feature in all subsequent editions. In the early decades of the nineteenth century Thaddeus Mason Harris adapted one of Preston’s later versions into the first Opening Charge given above (the shorter of the two). The second Opening Charge originates in Charles Whitlock Moore’s The Masonic Trestle-board, which purported to contain the working from the Baltimore Convention of 1843. This is the Opening Charge that can be found in Monitors with relevancy to our jurisdiction throughout the remainder of the nineteenth century. Although the two Opening Charges reference the same source material and evoke a similar sentiment, your committee believes both are beautiful expressions that deserve to be authorized for use.


There’s a lot more marrow in the bone of this edition of The Monitor, the first published since 1989. The Installation of Officers is revised, just in time for our Installation nights. Now I have to see what The Chaplain’s Book is. Never heard of it.

From the 1740s to the 1840s to the second quarter of the twenty-first century, what we, as Free and Accepted Masons, think, say, and do in lodge remains continuous and relevant, no doubt thanks to our own consistency when we “mix again with the world.”

If you are of these households of the faithful, I wish you a Happy Passover or Happy Easter.
     

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

‘New book: The Dream of a Noachide’

    
A. Terán photo
Grand Master Steven A. Rubin presents RW Thomas Barat his regalia as our Grand Representative near the Grand Lodge of Hungary at Abravanel 1116’s Table Lodge on March 25.

Full Magpie coverage of last night’s unforgettable ALR meeting is forthcoming but, first, some great news about one of our brethren. Bro. Thomas Barat has authored a newly published book!

Egy Noachita Álma is a Hungarian text for the youngest Entered Apprentice as well as for the petitioner seeking admission to the worshipful lodge. The Dream of a Noachide, in English, is available, partially (minus Hungarian Masonic history), online here.

It has been an exciting week for Bro. Tom. Last Wednesday, his lodge, Abravanel 1116, welcomed the Grand Master to its Table Lodge for the traditional apron presentation, as Tom was invested with his regalia as the Grand Representative of the Grand Lodge of New York near the Grand Lodge of Hungary. Huzzah!

Tom is in the Masonic blogosphere too. Click here.

And we will bring him to the lectern of The American Lodge of Research one night, and I’ll let you know when that is scheduled.
     

Monday, March 30, 2026

‘AMD Ingatherings in NY & NJ’

    
I’ll close out the Magpie month of March with AMD news. The Allied Masonic Degrees in New York and New Jersey have announced Ingatherings. The graphics below (click to enlarge) have all the info.



      

Tuesday, March 24, 2026

‘More music on Palm Sunday’

    

Palm Sunday arrives on the 29th, and Bro. Erik Carlson has a musical program planned for the Church of St. Thomas More.

Erik is our organist at Publicity Lodge 1000, and he plays for other lodges in Masonic Hall. He also is the director of music at the church. From the publicity:


You are invited! The ancient Christian text, Stabat Mater (Mary suffering beneath the Cross) will be performed by GRAMMY® musicians under the direction of Bro. Erik Carlson. Musical settings for choir and orchestra by Vivaldi, Palestrina, Rheinberger, and others. A goodwill donation of $20 is requested.


Thomas More is located at 65 East 89th Street, in the Yorkville part of Manhattan. “Sounds” like a great way to spend some time in the city. Nice weather is forecast too.
     

Monday, March 23, 2026

‘Research lodge to visit Shenandoah Valley’

    
On this date—and at this hour—in 1862, a lesser known, but nevertheless consequential, clash raged in the Shenandoah Valley during the U.S. Civil War—so that’s were the research lodge is headed next month.

Civil War Lodge of Research 1865, chartered by the Grand Lodge of Virginia in 1995, will meet Saturday, April 11. Odd thing: We will open at one location, but close at another. No Mackey Landmark nor Schrödinger theory is a factor.

Mt. Jackson 103
Specifically, we will meet Saturday morning at ten o’clock inside Magnetic Lodge 184’s home in Stanley. I don’t know the meeting agenda, but after it’s tackled we’ll go on refreshment, have lunch there, and then travel a few minutes north to Mount Jackson Lodge 103, in Mount Jackson, to close.

The night before, we will gather for dinner at Southern Kitchen in New Market, but the customary extracurricular activities (visits to historic places, Saturday supper) are not pre-planned this time, which is disappointing, but we’ll think on our feet.

The recommended sites to see include:


I doubt I’ll have time for all those, but I’ll see what the brethren prefer and go with them.

The Battle of Kernstown? The lodge trestleboard informs us:


Intelligence Failures
and the Road to Kernstown

Nathaniel P. Banks
By March 1862, Maj. Gen. Thomas J. “Stonewall” Jackson’s command in the Valley had dwindled to fewer than 4,000 effective soldiers due to illness and reassignments. Facing a Union force of nearly 20,000 under Maj. Gen. Nathaniel P. Banks, Jackson was forced to retreat forty miles south of Winchester to Mount Jackson. Believing the Confederates were no longer a threat, the U.S. War Department ordered Banks to move most of his command east to support Maj. Gen. George B. McClellan’s Peninsula Campaign.

James Shields
On March 21, Confederate sympathizers observed Union troops leaving Winchester but failed to notice that Brig. Gen. James Shields’ division remained nearby. This faulty intelligence led Jackson to believe he faced only a small rear guard. Eager to prevent Union reinforcements from reaching McClellan, Jackson marched his exhausted division northward to strike.

The Battle for Pritchard’s Hill

On March 22, a skirmish broke out south of Winchester. During the fight, General Shields was wounded by shrapnel, leaving Col. Nathan Kimball in operational command. Despite Shields’ orders to chase the Confederates, Kimball held the high ground at Pritchard’s Hill.

The main battle began at nine the following morning. Jackson, still operating under the belief that he held the numerical advantage, conducted a brief reconnaissance and decided to attack. In reality, Kimball had roughly 7–9,000 troops available, significantly outnumbering Jackson’s 4,000 men.
 
The Fight for Sandy Ridge

Finding the Union center at Pritchard’s Hill too strong, Jackson moved his infantry and artillery westward toward Sandy Ridge to attempt a flanking maneuver. By 3 p.m., Confederate artillery on the ridge had successfully suppressed the Union guns on the hill.

The tide turned when Union Col. Erastus B. Tyler’s brigade counterattacked. The fighting centered around a shoulder-high stone wall, where Confederate infantry under Brig. Gen. Richard B. Garnett held their ground with desperate tenacity. For more than an hour, the two sides engaged in a blistering musketry duel at close range. By late afternoon, the Confederate line began to buckle. Jackson’s troops were running dangerously low on ammunition, and Kimball had funneled fresh Union reinforcements into the fight. Seeing his flank being turned and his men exhausted, Garnett ordered a retreat near sunset to save his command.


Kernstown Battlefield will be open today from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. for tours, etc. to mark the 164th anniversary of the first Battle of Kernstown.


Aftermath and Strategic Impact

The Battle of Kernstown ended after ten hours of combat. The casualties were heavy relative to the size of the forces:

• Confederate: 733 killed, wounded, or captured (22 percent of the force).
• Union: 575 casualties.

Though Jackson lost the battle—his only defeat as an independent commander—he achieved his primary goal. The intensity of the attack convinced Washington that Jackson had a much larger army. Fearing for the safety of the capital, the War Department pulled 20,000 Union troops away from the Peninsula Campaign and sent them back to the Shenandoah Valley. This diversion weakened McClellan’s advance on Richmond and allowed Jackson to begin the series of victories that would make him a legend.


Is there a Masonic link to all this? I guess we’ll find out when a paper is presented in lodge.

Our next meeting will be July 18 at Monterey Pass, Pennsylvania, not far from Gettysburg. On October 10 we’ll be back in Virginia at Fort Monroe.

Get well wishes to Bro. Bennett Hart, our Secretary and our District Deputy Grand Master. I hope we’ll see him there in three weeks.
     

Sunday, March 22, 2026

‘Top U.S. diplomat visits Havana Masons’

    
U.S. Embassy Cuba

The United States’ senior diplomat in Cuba visited that nation’s Scottish Rite Supreme Council last week for discussion of possible cooperation in distributing humanitarian aid—and even some Masonic history, according to a March 18 post on the American embassy’s Facebook page.

Chargé d’Affaires Mike Hammer met Sovereign Grand Commander José Ramón Viñas, 33° that day. The social media post simply says:


U.S. Embassy Cuba
Our Chief of Mission Mike Hammer visited the Masonic Supreme Council (33rd) of Cuba and its Sovereign Grand Commander, José Ramón Viñas. They talked about the challenges Cubans face and the support they can provide for the distribution of humanitarian aid. He also learned about the history of Freemasonry in Cuba, and its origins in the United States.


U.S. Embassy Cuba

I see no more open source information on the meeting, nor do I know if Hammer is a Freemason. What I can say is the diplomat has been meeting with religious groups, independent newspapers, and others lately, as if Washington is looking beyond the communist regime for the island country’s future while that failed state forces its people to redefine poverty and misery. They no longer have simple electricity or fuel, prompting protests in the streets as a nationwide catastrophe looms. The United States already delivers humanitarian relief, as does Mexico.

The United States reopened an embassy in Havana in 2015, fifty-four years after full diplomatic relations were terminated following Cuba’s nationalization of billions of dollars of American-owned businesses. Hammer has been in his position since November 2024, serving on a temporary basis. He is a former ambassador to Chile whose personal life has taken him to Brazil, Colombia, El Salvador, Honduras, and Venezuela.

Washington’s view of Freemasonry in Cuba may be reflected in this State Department damning 2023 report on human rights abuses, which says: “Officially recognized churches, Freemasons, and several fraternal and professional organizations were permitted to function outside the formal structure of the state or the ruling party.”

Freemasonry in Cuba is hardly free of communist entanglement though. That’s a story I have avoided blogging about because it’s so obvious it would be like writing about the weather. Use your favorite search engine to learn of their grand lodge’s turmoil.

Meanwhile, in more recent days, America’s communist pig-dogs:

New York Post
Click here for the Post’s story yesterday.


     

Saturday, March 21, 2026

‘Grand Master cigar announced today’

    

“To know how to smoke is to recover certain forgotten rhythms, to re-establish communication with the self.”
 
Zino Davidoff


You know May 31 is International Enjoy a Cigar Day, and this year you can savor a smoke that celebrates our Grand Master especially. Just today we learned of the release of the Grand Lodge of New York’s official cigar: the Grand Master, made by Baron of HAVANA. From the publicity:


We’re proud to announce that a Brother-owned business, Baron of HAVANA, has created a limited edition custom premium cigar, the Grand Master, with net proceeds to support the Brotherhood Fund.

This cigar-blend honors the Most Worshipful Steven Adam Rubin, Grand Master, and is handcrafted in the Dominican Republic. Presented in imperial blue with gold foil imprint. Only 1,000 individually numbered boxes will be produced. Each pre-sale box will cost $156.95. (Discounts will be applied for bulk purchases.)

Please find all of the details about the cigar and pre-sale here.

Orders can be placed through the Baron of HAVANA website and also will be for sale at the March special Grand Lodge session, our May Grand Lodge session, and other events.


(Grand Lodge F&AM of the State of New York is a trademark licensor only, and is not engaged in the sale of tobacco products. Sold exclusively by Baron of HAVANA.)

Behind The Grand Master cigar stands José “Jochy” Blanco, a legendary tobacco icon whose expertise spans more than four decades. Jochy blends with both intuitive mastery and meticulous precision, understanding how tobaccos from different regions and harvests will develop over time while ensuring every cigar delivers consistent, complex excellence. (Cigar Aficionado magazine’s Master Blender of the Cigar of The Year 2019.)


Aged for at least five years. The Grand Master is not merely a premium cigar. It is a masterpiece exclusively rolled by hand, a tribute to the principles of patience, precision, and excellence that define both the Masonic Craft and the art of fine tobacco. This patient maturation allowed the tobaccos to marry completely, developing a complexity and smoothness that simply cannot be rushed. Time, after all, is the one ingredient that cannot be substituted.


Each box contains ten toros (6x52) which, the website says, are medium bodied. Shipping is to begin this month.

I’m not sure what is meant by five years of aging. That is an inordinate period for aging either bales of leaves or, certainly, a finished product. I hereby willingly suspend disbelief for the sake of having a good time.

Speaking of good times, International Enjoy a Cigar Day was established in 2018 by both Cigar Rights of Europe and Cigar Rights of America, two lobby groups that try to protect cigar enthusiasts from the relentless government encroachments against their harmless hobby.
     

Friday, March 20, 2026

‘Freemasonry and the pursuit of Happiness’

    
National Archives
‘We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.’

Since the vernal equinox passed a minute ago, I think it’s okay to look to an event coming in late spring. This is far outside my orbit, but Arizona Lodge of Research 1 will host a discussion at its quarterly stated meeting on June 10 that’ll be very timely, with the Declaration of Independence’s 250th anniversary only several weeks afterward.

W. Ted Cross
At this meeting, Past Master Ted Cross will discuss “What the Founders Meant by Happiness: A Journey Through Virtue and Character.”

This will connect with the course, created with the National Constitution Center, he teaches at Arizona State University. This class, available free of charge online, is a “guided exploration of happiness, virtue, and democracy,” says ASU, describing the subject thusly:


ASU

What does it mean to live a virtuous life in a free society? This course invites learners to explore happiness not as the personal pursuit of feeling good but as an idea closely tied to character, civic responsibility, leadership, and participation in a constitutional democracy. At the heart of this is the belief that self-government begins with government of the self.

Through letters, speeches, essays, and stories from the founding era, learners see how key figures in American history understood happiness as the cultivation of virtue and self-mastery, and how they wrestled—often imperfectly—with questions of moral judgment in both public and private life.

By engaging with these historical examples, learners consider how ideas about character, leadership, moral responsibility, and civic duty shaped the American experiment in self-government and continue to resonate in our civic life today.

12 Self-Paced Modules

Each module combines primary source texts, interpretive essays, and guided inquiry reflection to support reflection on how ideas from the past can inform judgment, responsibility, and participation in a constitutional democracy today, including:

► What does it mean to pursue happiness in a society shaped by competing values and interests?
► How should character and virtue shape leadership, citizenship, and public decision-making?
► What responsibilities accompany individual freedom in a democratic society?
► How can virtue formation, historical understanding, and self government strengthen civil dialogue and civic life, rather than deepen polarization?


On the Masonic side, this research lodge in its social media says:


What Did the Founders Mean by Happiness? What did the Founders really mean by the “pursuit of Happiness?” Not comfort, but character, virtue, and purpose.

Explore these ideas in a new free online course from ASU and the National Constitution Center. Then join Dr. Ted Cross on June 10 at the Arizona Research Lodge 1 Quarterly Stated Meeting, where he will speak on the course and its connection to Masonic philosophy and practice.


W. Bro. Cross is a Past Master of the lodge. You might know him from several appearances on the Craftsmen Online podcast. He was RW Michael Arce’s guest last August 4—click here—to talk about “The Science of Happiness and Meaning.”

At ASU in Tempe, Cross is the Assistant Vice President, Principled Innovation, in the Office of University Affairs, where he “centers on advancing ASU’s ninth design aspiration—Practice Principled Innovation. Ted collaborates with university leaders to embed practices that draw on values, character, civic and intellectual assets to drive human flourishing at ASU and beyond.”

This sounds like an amazing program for Arizona Lodge of Research’s June 10 meeting at the century-old Phoenix Masonic Temple. Remember, Masonic research that reflects on specific Masonic people and events of the past also ought to make the meaning of Masonry an animating energy in our lives now.

Check out Bro. Cross’ other Craftsmen Online appearance, from December 15, on “The Masonic Mind” here.
     

Saturday, March 14, 2026

‘Masonry’s mistaken meaning of Music’

    
Bro. Howard Kanowitz presenting ‘What’s Wrong with the Seven Liberal Arts and Sciences?’ this morning at New Jersey Lodge of Masonic Research and Education 1786 at Freemasons Hall in North Brunswick. He spoke of Music, but is not conducting an orchestra here.

I’ve always insisted lunch is the most important meal of the workday, and it’s essential to a daylight lodge as well.

New Jersey Lodge of Masonic Research and Education 1786 met this morning at Freemasons Hall in North Brunswick for what turned out to be a pretty quick communication. Only ten were in attendance, which was unfortunate because our speaker was the inimitable Howard Kanowitz, doing his thing as only he can do. Some of our principal officers were absent, including Secretary Erich, who is in California speaking at the International Conference on Freemasonry. He sent me an email last night describing the debauchery few would believe is possible among Freemasonry’s celebrity intellectuals.

Click to enlarge.
Speaking of conferences, Past Master Bob, filling the loafers of absent Secretary Erich, updated us on the John Skene Masonic Conference coming in August. We already knew it will span the weekend of August 28 and will take place at the Grand Lodge of New Jersey’s Fellowship Hall (except for the Gravesite Memorial at Skene’s approximate final resting place). Now we know the speakers.

✓ Dr. Heather K. Calloway, Executive Director of University Collections at Indiana University.
✓ Robert L.D. Cooper, retired Curator of the Grand Lodge of Scotland and now co-host of the M.A.G.I. Podcast.
✓ Mark Tabbert, formerly of the George Washington Masonic National Memorial and now of the Masonic Service Association of North America, and author, and the other M.A.G.I. co-host, etc.
✓ The aforementioned Erich Huhn.
✓ And David Palladino, who is practically the lone champion of the humanities in New Jersey Freemasonry.

Other speakers are not confirmed yet but, trust me, they are authors from academia you know.

We received some sad news today—news to me anyway—as Len March, our research lodge’s inaugural treasurer, who manned that desk for many years, had passed away.

Also, it was noted how 2026 marks twenty-five years since MW David A. Chase set us to labor Under Dispensation. Vivat!

But lunch today—technically First Lunch, since we got to the restaurant before 11 a.m.—was a great time together. Junior Warden Dave, Senior Deacon Glenn, Bob, and I gabbed about Freemasonry over good grub and coffee. We chatted about things that could be improved in the field of Masonic education in New Jersey. Naturally, that topic could fill an immersive three-day conference of its own, so we circumscribed our desires and talked for a fast paced two hours about what we feasibly could affect. Lunch was longer than the meeting that brought us together in the first place.

Oh yeah, the meeting!

Howard presented “What’s Wrong with the Seven Liberal Arts and Sciences?” Music is the short answer.

By that, he means the citation of music within the Middle Chamber Lecture of the Fellow Craft Degree is discordant. Here’s how New Jersey’s version of the lecture addresses Music:


Music is that elevated science which affects the passions by sound. There are few who have not felt the charms of music, and acknowledged its expressions to be intelligible to the heart. It is a language of delightful sensation, far more eloquent than words; it touches and gently agitates the passions; it wraps us in melancholy, or elevates us in joy; it melts us in tenderness, or excites us to war. It is truly congenial to the nature of man for, by its powerful charms, the most discordant passions may be subdued.


I’d say what Howard means is, grouped among the Quadrivium, Music—in this particular Masonic context—is incongruent. The lecture’s talk of the incitement of passions, melancholy, joy, etc. makes Music sound more akin to the Trivium’s arts of Grammar, Rhetoric, and Logic, whereas Music would belong with Arithmetic, Geometry, and Astronomy if we instead noted its nature as a science of sound. Naturally, he spoke of the Harmony of Spheres so we understood why Music is a sibling of Arithmetic and Astronomy. This is something I’d never thought about, possibly because of my failure to internalize and recite the lecture for the Second Degree when I should have as an aspiring lodge officer decades ago—or since.

As an aside, let me explain that Music-as-science is how it worked originally. The Music paragraph in William Preston’s Illustrations of Masonry (1775 edition) says:


Music teaches us the art of forming concords so as to make delightful harmony by a mathematical and proportional arrangement of acute, grave, and mixed sounds. This art is by a series of experiments reduced to a demonstrative science with respect to tones and the intervals of sound only. It inquires into the nature of concords and discords, and enables us to find out the proportion between them by numbers.


There’s a saying at New Jersey’s research lodge: Ben Hoff (our other eminent scholar) views Freemasonry through a microscope, and Howard views Freemasonry through a telescope, meaning Ben searches internally in his forensic studies of ritual evolution, and Howard scans a broad horizon to chart another direction Freemasonry can send us. Ben would’ve pointed out that Preston bit had he been there. Anyway, the world history Howard unspooled took us from Pythagoras and Martianus Capella to Brahe and Kepler, with stops in Prague and Vienna to visit Mozart and Beethoven. Really outstanding work, and presented without reading material—no paper nor notes, nothing, nada. An appropriate topic for π Day too.

Without revealing the substance of the private conversation during First Lunch, we groused about how few Masons can be motivated to come hear fascinating Masonic talks. Never mind conceiving, researching, and writing such pieces of architecture themselves, but just showing up to listen to one of the best in the field.

A new clock has been hung in the lodge room! I’ve been attending various meetings here for twenty years and I’d swear the previous clock was always off by fifteen or sixteen hours. This one correctly shows the division of time.

We will do it again on Saturday, June 13. I’ll be back at the lectern September 12 to recount a far less enchanting tale of Masonry’s past.
    

Friday, March 13, 2026

‘Wendell K. Walker Lecture on Thursday’

    

Look, if you’ve never listened to me before, this is a good time to start: Get thee to Old Number 2 next Thursday to hear this lecture.


Wendell K. Walker Lecture
Independent Royal Arch Lodge 2
‘St. John of Jerusalem:
A Link to the Past’
by Pete Normand
Thursday, March 19 at 7 p.m.
Masonic Hall, Empire Room


You probably noticed how a few things we accept without question about our fraternity’s past cannot be explained anyway. For example, where did the Holy Saints John come from?

They are not found in the Old Charges, where we learn how St. Alban actually was the patron of masons. So how did John the Baptist and John the Evangelist enter Masonic ritual and symbol? Bro. Normand’s explanation will astound you.

You might not believe a Byzantine patriarch of Alexandria, Jonathan Swift, Chevalier Ramsay, T.E. Lawrence, a patriarch of Jerusalem, and a London tavern could have much in common—and especially with our ritual—which is why you should attend I.R.A. 2 next week.

More than merely one scholar’s opinion, Pete connects historical dots that will convince you.

His Masonic biography says:

An active Freemason since 1978, he is a Past Master of four Masonic lodges, a past presiding officer of all the bodies of the York Rite, a 33° member of the Scottish Rite of Freemasonry, and is a Past Grand Chancellor of the Grand College of Rites, U.S.A. In 1992, he was the Charter Master of St. Alban’s Masonic Lodge 1455, the first lodge created to pursue the best traditional practices of Freemasonry. From 2010 through 2014, he was President of the Masonic Restoration Foundation, an international organization that promotes and facilitates the formation of traditional and observant lodges. Best known as a Masonic researcher, writer and lecturer, Pete is a Past Master (1989) of Texas Lodge of Research, where he was named its fifteenth Fellow in Masonic Research in 2001. From 1991 through 1994, he edited and published American Masonic Review. He is a founding member, former editor and Fellow and of the Scottish Rite Research Society, founded in 1991. He continues to serve on the Society’s Board of Directors. In 2010 he was named the ninety-ninth member of the Society of Blue Friars, an invitational society of Masonic authors. Since 1984, he has served as the librarian and archivist of the Brazos Valley Masonic Library & Museum. He has served on the Fraternal Relations Committee of the Grand Lodge of Texas since 1991, and is a Past Chairman of the Commission on Information for Recognition of the Conference of Grand Masters in North America.

This will be Pete’s second Wendell K. Walker Lecture, the first being way back in the previous millennium.
     

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

‘Manly P. Hall at 125’

    
Manly Palmer Hall
Next Wednesday will be the 125th anniversary of the birth of Manly Palmer Hall, so his creation, the Philosophical Research Society, will celebrate with programming to honor his life’s work. From the publicity:


Join us in celebrating the 125th anniversary of the birth of Manly P. Hall (March 18, 1901- August 29, 1990). This month, we offer a series of events paying tribute to Hall, his teachings, and to seekers everywhere dedicated to wisdom and deeper knowledge.


Manly Hall and the Little World
of PRS: A 125th Birthday Celebration
Wednesday, March 18 at 7 p.m.
Tickets here

To celebrate Manly’s life is to celebrate the philosophy he lived and the place of philosophical inquiry he gifted for all seekers to enjoy. For this special evening, we will be joined by PRS President John Pillsbury; Amanda Brass, host of the Manly Hall Reading Group and PRS Monthly Tours; and Stephen Reedy, who has taught several courses on Hall’s The Secret Teachings of All Ages. This panel, moderated by PRS lecturer and publications manager, Devon Deimler, will lead us through the story of Hall’s life and how PRS has been and continues to be at the heart of his life’s work: as a center of learning, community, and the invitation for all who visit to take the truth, beauty, wisdom, and love they may discover within themselves back into the world.

Our panel’s reflections will be augmented with a stunning slideshow of original design plans and photographs of PRS’ changing architecture over the years, as well as clips drawn from the hundreds of inspired lectures Hall delivered in the auditorium in which we’ll be gathered. Attendees will be invited to share their own recollections and stories of what Manly Hall and PRS have meant to their lives.

The Manly Hall Reading Group
Tuesday, March 17 at 7:30 p.m.
Tickets here

Ever wanted to dive into Manly Hall’s work, but weren’t sure you could commit to a whole class? PRS presents a monthly reading group! Students and seekers will meet host Amanda Brass in the PRS Library at 7:30 p.m. Opening ritual will include the pulling of one tarot card from the Knapp-Hall tarot deck, then reading out loud from the book until 9 p.m. Final 30 minutes are dedicated to questions and discussion.

Peace Class with Mandy Kahn
in the PRS Library
Sunday, March 22 at 4 p.m.
Tickets here

This 90-minute class is designed to provide attendees with a practical, immediate tool kit for inner peace through a sequence of guided meditations and visualizations. These practices are intended to lift the individual perspective into the “Peace Mind”—a higher state of consciousness characterized by peace-without-end, universal compassion, and a profound sense of purpose. By engaging in guided processes to clear the mental and emotional blocks that often obscure our natural state of tranquility, participants will create space for internal clarity and open themselves to receiving messages from their own higher selves.

These practices are rooted in the belief that cultivating inner peace is the essential foundation for a more peaceful society.

Manly P. Hall:
Prophet of Consciousness,
a talk with Stephan Hoeller
Tuesday. March 24 at 7:30 p.m.
Tickets here


Join us as we celebrate Manly P. Hall’s birthday with recollections from Stephan Hoeller, an esteemed lecturer at PRS since the 1970s!

“It is a teaching well known in some theologies that the dead live on in the memories of those who knew them in life. As times pass and the admiring crowds vanish, it may be of importance for the few who were still present when the sage was with us to invoke their memories of this truly remarkable man. Those who remember will not let go of the image of the noble figure who was so often seen by us in his office or library and lecture room surrounded by splendid objects from many cultures, emanating an aura of gentlemanly refinement combined with subtle humor, seated in a huge chair, delivering long discourses of inspiring and informative content. When closing my eyes, I can still perceive the Barrymore-like profile and can hear the melodious voice conveying idealism, insight, and wonder. The memories of the sage have their own liberating power. In an age where fear, sorrow, and confusion are omnipresent, such thoughts are a great blessing indeed. Perhaps this small account of reminiscences may lighten the weight of time and place us on the eternal ways, where we might meet the unforgettable sage.”

  

Stephan A. Hoeller,
Remembering an American Sage: An Admirer and Associate Reminisces about Manly Palmer Hall

Manly Hall’s Adventures with Books,
a talk with William Kiesel
Wednesday, March 25 at 7 p.m.
Tickets here

In-Person and Online event!

Manly P. Hall’s monumental work The Secret Teachings of All Ages is a comprehensive tome on the wisdom traditions of the West and acts as a guiding light to seekers of the mysteries. The Philosophical Research Society Library became the center of research for these topics after Hall’s enthusiastic efforts at collecting source materials in its hallowed shelves.


In honor of Manly Hall’s birthday on March 18 and his contribution to the preservation of these materials, William Kiesel will present “Manly P. Hall’s Adventures with Books,” which features stories of Hall’s discovery and acquisition of the treasures in the PRS Library stacks. Some of the most intriguing and important items of the collection will be discussed and anecdotes from Hall’s experiences gathering the books together will accompany the visual presentation.

A Tour of The Philosophical Research Society
Saturday, March 28 at 11 a.m.
Tickets here

Explore the Philosophical Research Society storied history, beautiful and rare collections, and Mayan Revival architecture! Whether you’re a fan of Los Angeles architecture, rare books, hidden archives, Golden Era Hollywood, or Manly Hall’s works, PRS is thrilled to announce visitors can now book tours to see our entire campus.


Experience the wonder (inside and out!) of the Mayan Revival jewel known as The Philosophical Research Society! Tours embark on foot from the courtyard, to the Library, up to the Lecture Room, around the outdoors statues, down to the art gallery, through the bookstore, and ending in the auditorium.